Telepresence robot gives me wicked case of the giggles

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Wed, 2013-11-06 09:32

Yesterday I took a test drive of a remote-presence device called a Beam, made by Suitable Technologies. From my office in Cleveland, I controlled the robot via my laptop and made it scoot around and chat with folks at the FutureMed November 2013 tradeshow at the Hotel Del Coronado, San Diego.

The ease with which I could interact and even pester people at this event through the Beam soon reduced me to giggles, exacerbated by the fact that my uncontrolled tittering was being beamed rather loudly into a posh conference hall 2,400 miles away ... making bystanders turn their heads and watch with bewilderment and amusement.

First, my esteemed colleague Bill Wong (and a fellow editor on Machine Design's sister publication, Electronic Design) connected me with Suitable Technologies. Next, I downloaded to my laptop the software needed to control a Beam telepresence device and remotely took possession of one of the Beams (look out, people!) in the FutureMed conference hall.

Then, after Emily Li, an enterprise sales associate with Suitable set me up, I rolled my Beam out of her booth and to another booth at the show — that of Neural ID. After being told a few times that I was very loud (and I'm normally admonished for speaking too softly) I turned Beam's microphone down and chatted with Neural ID's PhD Tyson Thomas and computer scientist Karl Geiger about their pattern-recognition software.

Neural ID's technology is a topic for another day (on medicaldesign.com, where we'll post details) but in short, their pattern-ID software lets scientists and doctors see patterms in unstructured data faster with several learn functions. In fact, a company we regularly cover, National Instuments, has partnered with Neural ID. "Neural ID’s CURE technology and NI LabVIEW software enable intelligent solutions for this complex challenge that offer new capabilities for solving computer-intensive and large data set problems," says Thomas in a recent case study detailing how Neural ID’s CURE technology works with NI LabVIEW to track anomalies during the testing and inspection of CT images.

FutureMed November 2013 at Hotel Del Coronado

After another lap around FutureMed, I finally bumped into Bill Wong (or at least, his telepresence on another Beam). We were shooed away from a booth for being too distracting, so steered our Beams to a courtesy table where we parked and chatted before Bill led me to a table showcasing a 3D-printing technology.